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Louis van Gaal endured a nervous opening in Turin before Bayern Munich ran out 4-1 against Juventus to book their place in the Champions League knockout stages.
The Dutchman's reign at Bayern would almost certainly have been over after six months if the Italian side had prevailed and they had Van Gaal's heart racing when David Trezeguet, who had been doubtful to start with a calf injury, scored in the 19th minute.
Bayern pulled level when Jorg Butt put aside his goalkeeping duties to fire home a 30th-minute penalty and Ivica Olic gave them the lead six minutes into the second half. Van Gaal could finally rest easy when Mario Gomez made it 3-1 with seven minutes to go before Anatoliy Tymoschukto added a fourth in the last minute to send Bayern through from Group A with Bordeaux.
In Group C Real Madrid had the boost of a Cristiano Ronaldo goal after five minutes at Marseille but were pegged back seven minutes later when Lucho Gonzalez scored. Raul put Real ahead in the 60th minute and Ronaldo added his second with 10 minutes to go to give Real a 3-1 victory.
Over in Switzerland Milan, boasting a fit Ronaldinho, were expected to seal their place in the last 16 with an easy win. FC Zürich, who could not qualify but could have given Marseille a helping hand, had other ideas and Milan Grajic scored after 29 minutes. A Ronaldinho penalty in the 64th minute quelled the Swiss rebellion.
CSKA Moscow beat Besiktas 2-1 in Istanbul to go through from Group B with Manchester United but could be thrown out of the Champions League and banned from future competitions after two players gave positive drugs tests following a match against United.
The Russian defenders Alexei Berezutsky and Sergei Ignashevich have been provisionally suspended from all games. The random tests were carried out following the game with United on 3 November, which ended in a 3-3 draw.
Under Uefa regulations, if more than one player tests positive for banned drugs, action can be taken against the team. CSKA claim the positive results were down to a "clerical error", the two players having been given Sudafed on international duty. The club's medical staff had then failed to include the medication on a list given to Uefa